The evening world. Newspaper, September 5, 1911, Page 5

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he. a ae e905 to OA ee NL ATT TE T oOo PORTER RENAN IRR APSE LIONS ONT INET I AA AINE RT EE t aaieeetainal HE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, “STRONGARM” MEN ARREST 100 MORE AS CAR ROWDIES dementias Prison Sentences Fail to Stop Disorder at Culver Station at Coney. TROUBLE ON TROLLEYS. | Sixteen Youths Locked Up for | Annoying Passengers on Various Lines. Despite wholesale arrests, rowdyism at Coney Island and in Long Island City, with additional outbreaks In the Bronx, continued last night to engage | the police, and the courts this morning | were crowded again with prisoners! broucht in by the strong-arm squad end | other detectives, Retween noon yesterday and midnight more than one hundred arrests were made by the special squad, a record Second only to that of Sunday, when 127 men and boys were charged with| rowdyism in the at Coney Island, | Monday's sentences had little effect | on the returning throngs of last night, | even though it rally known | that Magistrate Dooley of the Coney | Island Court had sentenced fitty dwel- | Jere in Brooklyn, Manhattan and the Bronx to five days each in the work-| house without the alternative of fines | cars or st the gates was and had fined sixty other prisoners, all from ne: towns, from $3 to $% each. | Before midnight last night seventy-five | men and boys had been arrested in the Culver station at Coney Island for | climbing thro the car windows, tweny-four more complaints were inst prisoners taken in Long nd City and upward of a dozen noisy young men were arrested in south-bound cars coming through the Bronx. Magistrate Dooley was no more lentent | this morning than he was yesterday. “There is some excuse,” é being lenient with the out-of ple, who cannot be expected to know | fully the cond s here; but In the case of persons living in the city, where | every newspaper has been full of the! accounts of the crusade to put a stop to rowdyism in the cars, there Is no exeuse for such conduct and no possi- bility of being lenient with the of- fenders." MANY COULDN'T READ SIGNS IN ENGLISH. Most of the arrests last night, like those of Sunday, were of foreigners. ‘The Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company | put up red placards in the Culver sta- tion warning pasengers against climb ing through the car windows, but many of the home coming celebrators could Net read the English. The attendance @ the Island yesterday wae estimated at 350,000. Fourteen youths were arrested in Long Island City after the games in Celtic Park, when they su tearing down a section of park fence. Ten more were arrested for dis- order on the trolley cars, annoying pas-| sengers, pulling the fare registers and| indulging in other forms of rowdyism, Detectives captured four young men| who started a bediam late last night fn a south bound Union Railway car, on Westchester avenue and two more were arrested on another south bound car of the same company after a fight and a chase, | Most of to-day’s prisoners not only the tectives Kupee and | 1 three In night court, MeGowan arr $ Mason Schwinger, thirty » st Twenty-first street; Charles Tailan, twenty-five, of No msterdam aye- nue and John Sweeney, twenty-five. of No, Amsterdam avenue, | were arrested on a subway train | et Two Hundred and tv-second street and » Bronx, tor throwing the car and interfering with o Mag- Breen fined ntine Bennet, twenty-one, of No. st One Hun Sixteenth Frederick Ne ven, One Hur Fit. ames logan, elgh e Hundred and T and Raymond Far- | ter of No. Gouverneur Place, who had been arrested on a sur- fac ear of the Union Ratlway Com- pany on Westchester avenue, the Bronx, for annoying pass sand pulling the trolley pole off the » we rraigned, | Benn and Ne w “d $t0 each and Hoa iF —— TWO SENT TO WORKHOUSE FOR ANNOYING GIRLS. Robert McGinness and Martin Mor. ye Days | phy Sentenced for by Magistrate Kernochan, Robert McGinness and Martin Murphy | were discussing the latest tendency in Uterature on a stoop at Sixteenth street and Avenue last night while they molstened thelr th quaffings from a They had shortly after midnigh Mary Pornilla, a tfteen-year and Miss Stella McNamara with whom the little girl is living at No, 618 Hast wie » they Sixteenth street, wh them replied The two men home, First t and when ordered | intruders ran, ‘HONEY, MRS. MAIN-SQUEEZE IS COMING To TEA, AND MY TEA SET 1$ OUT OF STYLE — RUN GET ME VIOLINIST STABBED BY MAN WHO BROKE BOW AT WEDDING Guest Paid for Act, but Waited for Musician and Cut Him Fatally, Morris Kalter, thirty-elght years old, of No, St Stone avenue, it New York, Was & guest at a wedding celedration in that started last night in a little hall | at No, 153 Christopher street and lasted Well into to-day. In the early hours of the morning he walked up to Dimitrt Cynowltaz of No. 551 Graham avenue, a& violinist playing for the dancing, and told him his opinion of the mustcian's Playing, ‘ “You play Mke a Dutcher,” said Kalter Let me show you how,” and he held out his hand for the violin, But Cynowits refused to yield the ins’ and after some insistence d the musician's oow and ad spent ight in the police Bellon ff ap et th Me a ap polee i! This stopped the music, be ee rit 9 er Wer ith Hs their |#d the other guests, angry at having he da hout food a ting the! ‘| * dancing interrupted, surrounded hearings and their removal to the worl. Risse etry paid fgg Naga ar house Only a few were released on | gs, for the broken bow. Kalter was Dail. then ejected from the ha‘ When the dance was over, Cynewttz, on his way home, found Kalter wait- ing for him at @ stoop near Belmont and Thatford avenues, Hi and barred the musician’ “Give me back that $3," demanded Kalter. “I won't” replied Cynowilts, “You broke my bow and you ought to vay for it. there was a fixht, im the course of which the violinist was stabbed in the right side, Kalter ran, but was eaught by Detective Donnelion of the Liberty avenue station. Cynowits was taken to the Bradford Street Hospital. His con- dition is erttical. Kalter was held without by Mag- istrate Fiteh in the New Jersey Avenue Police Court, =a Bie TESLA SUED ON NOTE. oO ch, Kerr & Co, ecover 815,851.30, etrieal wizard, the e was to-day sued in the Supreme Court West.nghouse, Kerr & Co. to recover the sum by the Chureh, corporation of of $18,881.90 on a note, The complaint, usually brief, the legal Baldw Apri n firm of Griggs, simply . 1907, to the order of the plaintiff, ur months and bearing six per cent. No portion of tts has be Baldwin & paid, the complaint says, ‘Phe only sideratic named, so the information sets forth, 1a the formal “for value re- ceived.” Kubldo, w! They told placed them under arr Magistrate Kernochan th r seen the girls befor ‘ong the street, programmes of t and the neighbor policema: But the ho 4 st them ent them this Kalter struck Cynowitz and filed by recites the fact that the inventor executed the due in but the tndignant girls followed them until they met Policeman People's he story told by the girls and to the workpouse for five WILLIE, 1VE GOT TO GET THAT TEA SET— NOW IF 1 CAN GET THAT JOB AS I DON'T NEED IT Now, peT+ Give ME #]0 AND I'LL TAKE > | MY GUEST TO THE 5 SNOBB HOTEL FOR TEA— IT'S QUITE THE FASHION! < mnee ocit SEPTEMBER 5, 1911. CUT DOWN NUMBER OF INDICTMENTS ADVICE OF COURT a Judge Foster Tells Two Grand Juries Too Many Bills Are Found. B50 TEA SET—IMBID 304-604— THe SPORT IN THE PUZZY LID Judge Warren W. Foster, In Part 1) of General Sesstons to-day, tn im-| panneliing two Grand Juries for the September term of court, declared that | heretofore too many tndletments have | ue m n GREAT SEMI-ANNUAL Houseturnishing Sale Commencing To-Day and Continuing All Week Our response (o the irresistible September call for house furnishings was a deep underpricing of everything indiepen- sable for the housewife. Found in our spacious basement. ‘ Ree. | Now Res. | Now 4 qt. Enamelled Sauce Pot, 50c 25¢| Fels Naptha Soap; 7 for. 25¢ Enemelied Toa Kettle... .45¢ oat) pane Hated on 38¢ vey elie satel’ : Clothes Basket, best willow65e) 40€ Doulle’ Gatasal iad Rive Dry white twine Mop..... 45¢| 25¢ Galvanized Garbage Pail, , Boiler, enamelled. BSc WHA yaver 40c\ 29¢ Liquid Veneer. : Roll-T 1 Box...... 75¢| 55C Ostrich Feather Duster. .98¢| 18¢ | Kol. TP Bread Box...... 73¢ | Jumbo Ammonia, bottle... 15¢| 10¢ Parlor Broom, good quality 39¢| 25¢|"Wash Boiler, extra heavy Old Dutch Cleanse: been fled “Homes have been ruined, happt- | ness destroyed and men bdilghted for | life by unjust accusations,” Judge Foster said, “and I charge that you shall not return @ true bill unless you | you will justify @ conviction before a petty jury. | Many a man has had his life ruinod by an unjust indictment. [ will give you an Instance. A member of the Grand Jury panel had hit name stricken off the jury Ist by those re- sponsible for the makeup of that list simply because ho had once been In- dicted, In my opinion that sa very excellent qualification, He had been Indicted unjustly and would hesitate to indict others on hearsay and other illegal evidence, “I am very glad to inform the pub- Me that there has been no erlme wave this summer, Conditions are normal.” psddeiivtnie~-hceenaeg WRESTLING BOUT FATAL. Death Follows Tussle Prompted by Champtonshtp Meet. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 6 —Joseph Whoski, and Andrew Relda, Polanders, both about twenty-elght years old, got into an argument last night about t |rolative merits of the wrestling ty WELL m- pions who met in Chic yesterday, They deckled to settle the dispute by engaging in @ wrestling bout. Whoskt was thrown three times and was #0 badly hurt that he dled to-dny. Mis opponent was arrested, but as — — — death was purely acc ntal he will FUNERAL OF EARL KING. Theatrical Man Dies of Pneumonia Week After Adirondack Vacation, Arrangements are being made to-day for the funeral of Earl & King, well known among Eastern theatrical man- agers, who died of pneumonia yester- day at his home in the Wellmore apart- ments, Seventy-seventh street and Broadway, He had returned « week ago from & vacation tn the Adirondacks, He was fifty-three years old. Mr. King’s first theatrical venture was when he became treasurer of the Grand Opera House in 1881, subsequently being treasurer for productions of Charles Hoyt and Augustus Thomas, golng later with Henry Sav. tb ten years associated with the Shuber Last season he was the manager of “The Lottery Man’ company, Part of Ris career was as manager of the Ca- sino and Garden Theatres, He was a N ker and tn 1881 w Ellen Whittaker, of | native Wife Tries to Die. Not fancying her husband's attentions to other women, Mary Venupa, nineteen- year-old wife of Attilio Ven a, a der, of No, 12 Main street, Astoria, tempted suleide to- ny solution of corrosiy mate, » young woman Was taken to St. John’s Hospital and recove: Venupa brought their infant girl to the hospital and effected a reconciliation. Write what you ¢ FIGHT IN THE DARK BETWEEN 2 POLICE ten Off in Fierce Struggle in Poolroom. who bit er and also the one whose ‘Three young men wanted on a charge Was wounded. Both detectives of burglary and two detectives from pretty woll battered before they he dibehty ay F apture, the Liberty avenue station had a fierce 7 ave * megane Jersey Avenue Cout Hoff. fight early to-day in a pool parlor at wanted to make a complaint Blake and ‘Thatford avenues, on the Liner ¢ » who, he sald, had used lonely outskirts of Hast New York, wnnecessary violence, but Magistrate | Part of the thne the lights were out, | bic he (yr ici ef nree cach in $1,000 bn billtard cues, billies and chairs were serclaais | used as weapons and when it was over Took a Stroll Into River, | Detective Griece’s right lit Was Henry Bolke, a watter, fifty-two years | nearly bitten off and one of the prison- 1 AND S ACCUSED MEN Detective’s Finger Nearly Bit- releas {to be members of tho “Strong Arm" |#ang, an organiaation which the police | jbelleve is a revival of the om Kid ‘Twist gang, and they have been want- (ed since June 23, when thieves broke into Hyman Schwartz's rain coat ftac- |tory, No. 28 Powell street, and stole {$600 worth of rain coats, Hoffman, jAaronson and Markowitz were suspect- d and last night Detectives Grieco and Donnellon heard they were in the pool parlor, | The young men had received a tip | that the detectives were on their tratl, so they bolted the door of the pool par- |tor and warned Grieco and Donnelion }to clear out. The detectives’ answer | | was to batter In the door, and then the fight bewan. The turning out of the | Nghts made the detectives afraid to use! hey fought with their man was the one Swissco Grows New Hair Restores Gray Hair to Its Natural Color. E er’s had a bad wound on his head wly to-day and mie PO | 4 vung men 4 lown to the foot of Hust |twenty-two years old, et. He wander drug cepa ern Parkway; Louis . twenty and w one, of No. 1M Bel Ue, andi the tug Robert pia ans Benjamin Marko ms, OF| pamsine, dace Math st. | No, 1721 Pitkin aven amy sald taken to the Emergency Hospttal. Gen tae, CL NAANANAARAARE New York’s Newest Department Store idea establishment, MR. WitZLE- is the selling spirit of this POSITIVE RELIABILITY, TRUTH- Strictly a Store For the People 22d ant 23d STS, the man of new : This is No. 1, There are 10 Pictures in the series. Four prizes for each Picture. Look for No. 2 to-morrow. He — stands for are satisfied that the evidence before | Stops Dandruff and Scalp Diseases and What is Mr. Wizzle Saying? nk would be J. LIXESNER.Co, a FULNESS and FAIR DEALINGS, but ree particularly for TRUTHFUL- When KESNER says it and Mr. Wizzle endorses it—believe it. By way of making your acquaintance we intend to give. $500.00 in Gold $50.00 for Each of the Series of 10, as follows: Ist Prize, $20.00 3rd Prize, $10.00 2nd * 15.00 4th “ 5.00 Readers will fill in this coupon with w y think is the most appropriate ar A spec ted com mittee of publist Ac 4 to merit of answers. sth, The PRIZES will be ¢ ‘ded on Thursdea after che opening of the NEW STORE—when each o Isketch exhibition with the accepted answers, and the address of the winners attached In addition the p vinners will be announced in our regular advertiseme: Any written r sent in will receive the same con sideration as th 1 the coupons, Sixth Avenue, 22d & 3d Sts. WHAT IS MR, WIZZLE Fill in L. KESNER CO., Dept. B, SAYING? ‘cut out and mail to Sixth Avenue, 22d & 23d Streets, Name Address... State New York City. AAEM LI MMMM, 4 Or tin with copper bottom ; 7, 8 and 9 sizes........1.75 Udell’s Genuine **DETHsTO:DUST’’ A Chloride Sweeping Powder, Carpet& Rug 1 9 Special. Trial package 10c. Regular 25c package Cc SEPTEMBER NOTION SALE Willington Cotton, all sizes; dor. 25¢| Sperm’s Machine Oil; 2 oz. bot.. O3C' Warren Collar Supporters; card O3: 150 Asstd. Hair Pin Cabinets. 100 size; 3 for.. | 98¢ Warren SitkFeatherbone;12 yds. 79¢ Sew-on yey pee vy web. O9C % Washable Drees ids; regu- Starlight Hook and Eye; gross. 15¢ lar sizes 2,3, 4 .3 pairs 25¢ Te 02 sae i po Measures, tipped ends... O2¢ Soiibe vite pias eyed rehi ve Keite!Collar Supporters; alless. O5C " i Roll Tape, 24 yards... RCT ROT box 15¢| 2 hole Pear! Buttons L. M. BLUMSTEIN, West 125th St., Between 7th & 8th Aves. J B COR 84'" ST & GFP AVE. Is ofttimes misleading to contemplating buyers of Household Furniture. While that may be agreat inducement to some, we want you to know that Our Methods and Prices Are a Greater Attraction Acsents, 495 5 coon $150 Furnished We Pay Freight and Railroad Fare Furai Write for our NEW [W7a-t5 OUR LIBERAL CREDIT A WEEK OE. BOOKLET containis TERMS apply alse internation regarding) WERARACCOLLCR GA TEGE: to Long. slaw, New our outfits. Mailed iree. CHANDISE TO YOUR HOMEBT sires ee sath St. “L” Station it Corner A Remarkable Sale of | High Grade Dress Trimmings 3,000 YARDS-PERSIAN, METAL AND SIL K, BANDINGS and EDGINGS, in various widths. 856 & 9.25 Values $1.85 to $18.50 yard, Foreign Dress Silks | 5,000 Yards, Desirable Weaves, Inclhiding Pon- gees, Faney Tatietas, Checked Radiums, Em- broideved — Mousselines, — Messaline Ondines, Plain and Satin Crepes, Pims Printed Poplins, Fat _ Bor- Bengalines, Brocades, dered Mousselines, &c. Formerly $1.25 to $10.50 yard, Gauze: 596 » 3.50 Ducadwory L& iif Sheol Actual Value Bt { 1 Ni Special Deliveries to the Bronx and Westchester County AROYAL-FURNITURE CO ser eto Mateb 1 Vilas bibee Write for . Hengiog Glass Catalogue rd Medion sidel “Our Terms _ $3 Bown on $50 5 7.50 $¢ “ ae 75 PV PNENGS, 43 BRASS” BED, fw EVERY 100 IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU N A WORT SMP TLE, Ge AN f 4

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